Current:Home > ContactEthermac Exchange-Mexico overtakes China as the leading source of goods imported to US -Capitatum
Ethermac Exchange-Mexico overtakes China as the leading source of goods imported to US
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-06 11:36:12
WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first time in more than two decades,Ethermac Exchange Mexico last year surpassed China as the leading source of goods imported to the United States. The shift reflects the growing tensions between Washington and Beijing as well as U.S. efforts to import from countries that are friendlier and closer to home.
Figures released Wednesday by the U.S. Commerce Department show that the value of goods imported to the United States from Mexico rose nearly 5% from 2022 to 2023, to more than $475 billion. At the same time, the value of Chinese imports imports tumbled 20% to $427 billion.
The last time that Mexican goods imported to the United States exceeded the value of China’s imports was in 2002.
Economic relations between the United States and China have severely deteriorated in recent years as Beijing has fought aggressively on trade and made ominous military gestures in the Far East.
The Trump administration began imposing tariffs on Chinese imports in 2018, arguing that Beijing’s trade practices violated global trade rules. President Joe Biden retained those tariffs after taking office in 2021, making clear that antagonism toward China would be a rare area of common ground for Democrats and Republicans.
As an alternative to offshoring production to China, which U.S. corporations had long engaged in, the Biden administration has urged companies to seek suppliers in allied countries (“friend-shoring’’) or to return manufacturing to the United States (“reshoring’’). Supply-chain disruptions related to the COVID-19 pandemic also led U.S. companies to seek supplies closer to the United States (“near-shoring’’).
Mexico has been among the beneficiaries of the growing shift away from reliance on Chinese factories. But the picture is more complicated than it might seem. Some Chinese manufacturers have established factories in Mexico to exploit the benefits of the 3-year-old U.S.-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement, which allows for duty-free trade in North America for many products.
Derek Scissors, a China specialist at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, noted that the biggest drops in Chinese imports were in computers and electronics and chemicals and pharmaceuticals — all politically sensitive categories.
“I don’t see the U.S. being comfortable with a rebound in those areas in 2024 and 2025,” Scissors said, predicting that the China-Mexico reversal on imports to the United States likely “is not a one-year blip.’'
Scissors suggested that the drop in U.S. reliance on Chinese goods partly reflects wariness of Beijing’s economic policies under President Xi Jinping. Xi’s draconian COVID-19 lockdowns brought significant swaths of the Chinese economy to a standstill in 2022, and his officials have raided foreign companies in apparent counterespionage investigations.
“I think it’s corporate America belatedly deciding Xi Jinping is unreliable,” he said.
Overall, the U.S. deficit in the trade of goods with the rest of the world — the gap between the value of what the United States sells and what it buys abroad — narrowed 10% last year to $1.06 trillion.
veryGood! (62)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Federal judge blocks California law that would have banned carrying firearms in most public places
- Chemical leak at Tennessee cheese factory La Quesera Mexicana sends 29 workers to the hospital
- Ukraine ends year disappointed by stalemate with Russia, and anxious about aid from allies
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Dollarizing Argentina
- ICHCOIN Trading Center - The Launching Base for Premium Tokens and ICOs
- Your single largest payday may be a 2023 tax filing away. File early to get a refund sooner
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Oregon appeals court finds the rules for the state’s climate program are invalid
Ranking
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- States are trashing troves of masks and protective gear as costly stockpiles expire
- Trump’s lawyers ask Supreme Court to stay out of dispute on whether he is immune from prosecution
- Pompeii’s ancient art of textile dyeing is revived to show another side of life before eruption
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- ICHCOIN Trading Center: Cryptocurrency value stabilizer
- Singer David Daniels no longer in singers’ union following guilty plea to sexual assault
- Survivor Season 45 Crowns Its Winner
Recommendation
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
Artists rally in support of West Bank theater members detained since Dec. 13
Taylor Swift’s new romance, debt-erasing gifts and the eclipse are among most joyous moments of 2023
Judge weighs request to stop nation’s first execution by nitrogen, in Alabama
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
AP PHOTOS: In North America, 2023 was a year for all the emotions
I am just waiting to die: Social Security clawbacks drive some into homelessness
New lawsuit against the US by protesters alleges negligence, battery in 2020 clashes in Oregon